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Original Articles

The Cognitive Failures Questionnaire Revisited: Dimensions and Correlates

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Pages 238-256 | Received 14 Jun 2001, Accepted 18 Oct 2001, Published online: 30 Mar 2010
 

Abstract

The authors reexamined the factor structure of the Cognitive Failures Questionnaire (D. E. Broadbent, P. F. Cooper, P. Fitzgerald, & K. R. Parkes, 1982) and its correlates. The Cognitive Failures Questionnaire was designed to assess a person's likelihood of committing an error in the completion of an everyday task. A principal components factor analysis with varimax rotation yielded 4 internally consistent, interpretable factors. These factors were labeled Memory, Distractibility, Blunders, and (memory for) Names. This study lends partial support for the factor analytic solution proposed by L. K. Pollina, A. L. Greene, R. H. Tunick, and J. M. Puckett (1992). In addition, it extends previous findings by providing initial evidence for the construct validity of the factors established by correlating factor scores with measures of other related constructs (i.e., boredom proneness, attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder. Type A behavior pattern).

Additional information

Notes on contributors

J. Craig Wallace

J. Craig Wallace is now at Georgia Institute of Technology.

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